Liberal Leader Kathleen Wynne must step in to make sure documents sought by police investigating the gas plants scandal are made public immediately for voters to see, opposition parties demanded Friday.

“It’s not in our power,” Wynne said Friday in Newmarket after the New Democrats and Progressive Conservatives said voters deserve to see details before heading to the polls in six days.

“I’m not going to direct the clerk, I won’t direct the legislative assembly, I know that they will co-operate with the investigation,” she added.

“We do not have those documents to hand over — they’re in the hands of the legislative assembly.”

At issue is a court order obtained by the Ontario Provincial Police anti-rackets squad requesting the release of “all records” of any visits to the building by Peter Faist, a computer expert and the boyfriend of former premier Dalton McGuinty’s deputy chief of staff, Laura Miller.

Faist is a key figure in papers the OPP used to obtain a search warrant for 24 premier’s office computer hard drives in February, with police claiming he was given a special password enabling the holder to scrub information.

Police want to know if and when he was in the building between June 1, 2010 and March 30 of this year. Detectives alleged he wiped two of 24 hard drives and are doing forensic examinations on the remainder.

Faist has not been charged and maintains he has done nothing wrong. The focus of the breach of trust investigation is former McGuinty chief of staff David Livingston, whom police allege gave Faist the password. Livingston has denied any wrongdoing and no charges have been laid.

OPP officers made the request for the visitor log Thursday to legislative staff, not the premier’s office, with a 10-day deadline — but opposition parties insisted Wynne intervene.

“She has an obligation to do everything she can to make sure those documents get released . . . we shouldn’t have to wait until after June 12,” NDP Leader Andrea Horwath told a news conference at Queen’s Park.

“It’s a simple opportunity to show leadership and yet again Ms. Wynne failed,” Horwath added later in the day.

Conservative Leader Tim Hudak agreed with Horwath that the public needs time to “digest” any information before election day.

“This tells us they weren’t releasing all documents,” he said of the Liberals, noting Wynne has pledged repeatedly to “reveal all documents.”

Both Hudak and Horwath have promised to call an inquiry into the cancellation of gas-fired power plants in Mississauga and Oakville before the 2011 election that reduced McGuinty’s Liberals to a minority.

Todd Decker, deputy clerk of the legislative assembly, declined comment when asked if the information sought by the OPP would be made public.

Wynne insisted her government has been “open and transparent” on the gas plants since taking power from McGuinty on Feb. 11, 2013.

“On election day, on June 12, I’ll be judged on all of that — on whether I’ve done everything I can to ensure that under my leadership these mistakes won’t happen and on the virtues of my plan to create jobs and build our economy rather than tear it down,” the Liberal leader said.

Asked if she were worried the election would turn out to be a referendum on the gas plants scandal, Wynne said: “That really is up to the people of Ontario.”

Wynne said the Liberals have “learned” lessons from the gas plants debacle, which could cost up to $1.1 billion over the next 20 years as the plants are relocated to Sarnia and Napanee.

The OPP has also revealed McGuinty, as widely expected, was interviewed in April as part of their probe, but that disclosure caused a stir as Ontarians prepare to vote in an election that public opinion surveys suggest is too close to call.

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